I ranted today

There are big gaps between what I have come to believe in regarding both sound diabetes management and general good health and what I see in public policy, diabetes care guidelines, and clinical practice. This is a big topic, and I do not want to get into it right now. I've already done that today, but I will give examples.

• Insulin should be titrated to achieve target fasting BG levels of 4.0 to 7.0 mmol/L.

• Individuals can be taught self-titration, or titration may be done in conjunction with a healthcare provider.

• Suggested starting dose is 10 units once daily at bedtime.

• Suggested titration is 1 unit per day until target is reached.

• A lower starting dose, slower titration and higher targets may be considered for elderly or normalweight

subjects.

• In order to safely titrate insulin, patients must perform SMBG at least once a day fasting.

• Insulin dose should not be increased if the individual experiences 2 episodes of hypoglycemia

(BG <4.0 mmol/L) in 1 week or any episode of nocturnal hypoglycemia.

• For BG levels consistently <5.5 mmol/L, a reduction of 1 to 2 units of insulin may be considered

to avoid nocturnal hypoglycemia.

• Oral antihyperglycemic agents (especially secretagogues) may need to be reduced if daytime

hypoglycemia occurs.

Maybe this makes perfect sense to many, but it severely pissed me off! Why? Because this nearly killed me. I'm nearly blind because of bad management. If you want good control, you have to match insulin to your need, and your need follows patterns. No exceptions. But our patterns are all different, and many do approximate basal insulin action. But there's a large number that need better basal matching.

Grain is by definition a refined carb. We can't eat them whole. Grains are their own food group in Canada.

The acceptable macronutrient distribution range, or

percentage of total daily energy associated with reduced risk

of chronic disease for adults, is as follows: carbohydrate intake

of no less than 45% (in part to prevent high intakes of fat); and

fat intake of a maximum of 35% (26). Diets that provide

>60% of total daily energy from low-glycemic-index and

high-fibre carbohydrates improve glycemic and lipid control

in adults with type 2 diabetes (27).

These passages really push me. I want to take a baseball bat to a few heads, or better yet kneecaps. Their heads are worthless.

If you can't see why I'm angry, their argument goes like this:

"Sugar is the real problem here people. It causes increased triglycerides, and as sugar increases TGs it reduces your LDL particle sizes to dangerous levels. You have small, atherogenic LDL particles. This nasty sugar is also glycates and oxydizes these small LDLs. It's a double whammy. You are going to die young from CHD! "

The obvious solution here is to cut out sugar as much as possible. Present the problem to 1000 kindergarteners and you will get 1000 children no longer wanting to eat sugar.

"We don't want you to reduce sugar. We want you to package it with fibre to make its effects slower, and we want to package it with antioxidants to make it not oxydyze. Whatever you do, don't touch those bad fats though. We can't tell you why, but the Americans think they are bad."

Chemically sugar is sugar. Carbohydrates are all sugar. There's no such thing as a carbohydrate that isn't sugar. Got it yet? It doesn't matter that it's wrapped in fibre. It still goes into your bloodstream and your body recognizes it as sugar. You might not get as big a spike, but it's still creating TGs, small LDLs, and it's oxydizing away. Packaged antioxidants as found is fruits and veggies certainly help with the oxydization though. BTW there's no antioxidants to speak of in refined grains, rice, or potatoes.

Side note: potatoes used to be rich in vitamin E. Due to selective breeding, they have virtually none today.

So I wrote a letter about all this stuff and more. It was to a doctor on the committee that sets this stuff. He's a fairly well known Canadian diabetologist. I've met him before, and we've emailed before, briefly . He replied